Houston Chronicle

PepsiCo buys into the fizzy water trend with its purchase of SodaStream.

- By Abha Bhattarai

PepsiCo is betting big on Americans’ love affair with seltzer.

Six months after launching its own sparkling water brand, Bubly, the cola giant announced Monday that it is buying SodaStream Internatio­nal, the Israeli company behind the do-it-yourself soda maker, for $3.2 billion.

Seltzer sales have grown rapidly in recent years, as brands like La Croix, Topo Chico and Polar become household names. Much of the appeal, consumers say, is that the no-calorie, no-sugar drinks offer a healthful alternativ­e to traditiona­l sodas and diet drinks. And there is no shortage of options, as companies race to add alcohol, caffeine, even bacon flavoring to fizzy waters.

“Americans have been drinking seltzer for over a century, but we’ve hit a tipping point,” said Barry Joseph, author of the book “Seltzertop­ia: The extraordin­ary story of an ordinary drink.” “Seltzer isn’t just a beverage anymore, it’s become a lifestyle choice.”

Much of that, he said, is thanks to La Croix, which in the past decade has reinvented itself “from a drink for Midwestern soccer moms to a hip, cool drink for millennial­s.” The brand, founded in La Crosse, Wis., in 1981, has become the poster child for seltzer’s comeback. (Shares of La Croix parent National Beverage Corp. are up nearly 600 percent in the past five years.)

Sales of seltzer have grown 42 percent in the past five years, according to Beverage Marketing Corp., as Americans trade in sugary soda for healthier options. U.S. soda consumptio­n, meanwhile, is at a 31-year low, according to data from Beverage Digest.

Soda giants are taking note: Coca-Cola last year paid $220 million for Topo Chico, a 120-year-old brand of seltzer with a cult following. The investment appears to be paying off: Sales of Topo Chico rose 30 percent in the year’s first quarter, even as the company’s overall sales declined 16 percent.

“Consumers still like bubbles, they want carbonatio­n, but they want it in a healthier product,” Gary Hemphill, the managing director of research for Beverage Marketing Corp., told The Washington Post in 2015. “Those products really fit where the consumer wants to be.”

Americans have been drinking seltzer — and making it at home using carbon-dioxide cartridges -since the early 1900s, according to Joseph. Soda shops helped popularize drinks like egg creams (which are made with carbonated water, milk and flavored syrup) that families then re-created at home. But demand stalled during World War I and continued to “decline precipitou­sly by the decade,” Joseph said, until the 1970s, when Perrier expanded into the United States.

Since then, the drink has enjoyed a steady rise. SodaStream entered the U.S. market in the early 2000s, making it cheaper — and easier — for Americans to turn tap water into carbonated beverages. The company says it now has 12.5 million active customers, up from 4.5 million in 2012. Sales are up 31 percent so far this year.

 ?? Joe Raedle / Getty Images ?? Earlier this month, Israel-based SodaStream reported its strongest results ever, a 31 percent year-over-year 82 percent jump in net profit to $26 million.
Joe Raedle / Getty Images Earlier this month, Israel-based SodaStream reported its strongest results ever, a 31 percent year-over-year 82 percent jump in net profit to $26 million.

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